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Spanish · CEFR Band 1 (A1) · Chapter 15

Encantado Pleased to meet you

Final chapter: everything comes together. Greeting, introducing yourself, giving your age with tener, counting and using the plural, pointing at things (¿Qué es esto?) and asking the location (¿Dónde está?) — in one conversation. Social formulas: "Encantado", "Hasta pronto". The tú/usted choice also returns. New vocabulary: encantado, otra vez, juntos, todos, entender, hablar, saber, querer, amor, hasta pronto. Culture section: dos besos. Pronunciation corner: greeting smoothly.

¿Tú o usted? — tú or usted?

  1. Mike Encantado, profesora. ¿De dónde eres? Pleased to meet you, profesora. Where are you from? (slip: with a teacher use usted — say "¿de dónde es usted?")
  2. Marta Con una profesora, de usted: ¿de dónde es usted? With a teacher, use usted: ¿de dónde es usted?
  3. Mike Perdón. ¿De dónde es usted, profesora? Sorry. Where are you from, profesora?
  4. Marta Soy de Madrid. Encantada, Mike. I'm from Madrid. Pleased to meet you, Mike.

Hasta pronto — See You Soon

  1. Carlos Mike, ¡hablas español muy bien! ¿Entiendes todo? Mike, you speak Spanish very well! Do you understand everything?
  2. Mike Sí, ahora entiendo. Sé los números, las cosas, los lugares. Yes, now I understand. I know the numbers, the things, the places.
  3. Carlos Todos hablamos juntos. ¡Con amor al español! We all speak together. With love for Spanish!
  4. Mike Gracias, Carlos. ¡Hasta pronto! Thank you, Carlos. See you soon!
汉字PinyinPOSMeaning
encantado adj. pleased to meet you (m)
otra vez phr. again
juntos adv. together
todos pron. everyone, all
entender v. to understand
hablar v. to speak
saber v. to know
querer v. to want
amor n.m. love (m)
hasta pronto phr. see you soon

Juntarlo todo Putting it all together

Este capítulo reúne el Libro 1. Recuerda los pilares. (1) "ser" para la identidad/origen: Soy Mike, soy de Estados Unidos, es un reloj. (2) La edad con "tener", no "ser": Tengo veintiún años. (3) El género manda: el/un (m), la/una (f), y el artículo y el adjetivo concuerdan — y en plural añaden -s/-es: dos gatos negros, las mesas grandes. (4) Para una cosa sin nombre, "qué" + neutro: ¿Qué es esto? (5) Para el lugar, "estar": ¿Dónde está el baño? — Está allí. Y elige el trato: "tú" con amigos, "usted" con la profesora o alguien mayor.

This chapter gathers Book 1. Remember the pillars. (1) "ser" for identity/origin: Soy Mike, soy de Estados Unidos, es un reloj. (2) Age with "tener", not "ser": Tengo veintiún años. (3) Gender rules: el/un (m), la/una (f), and article and adjective agree — and in the plural add -s/-es: dos gatos negros, las mesas grandes. (4) For an unnamed thing, "qué" + neutral: ¿Qué es esto? (5) For location, "estar": ¿Dónde está el baño? — Está allí. And choose the address: "tú" with friends, "usted" with the teacher or someone older.

  • Encantado. Me llamo Mike y soy de Estados Unidos. Pleased to meet you. My name is Mike and I'm from the United States.
  • Tengo veintiún años y tengo dos gatos. I'm twenty-one and I have two cats.
  • ¿Qué es esto? — Es un libro. Está sobre la mesa. What's this? — It's a book. It's on the table.
  • Hablamos otra vez. ¡Hasta pronto! We'll talk again. See you soon!

Dos besos Dos besos — the greeting

In Spain, you greet with two kisses — one on each cheek — and it catches every newcomer off guard once.

Two cheek kisses

Woman with woman, and woman with man, usually give dos besos (right cheek first). It's an air-kiss with cheek contact, not a real kiss.

Men shake hands

Man with man usually shakes hands or, if they're close, a hug with a pat on the back — not kisses. In very formal contexts, a handshake is enough for everyone.

One or two, by country

There's variation: in Spain it's two kisses; in many Latin American countries it's just one. Physical closeness in general — standing near, touching an arm while talking — is normal and friendly, not invasive.

Congratulations! You've finished Book 1. You can greet, introduce yourself, count, point at things and ask about places — politely. When unsure about the greeting, follow the other person; in a social setting in Spain, expect dos besos. See you soon in Book 2!

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